4.7 Article

Compact stars: To cross or go around? That is the question

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PHYSICS LETTERS B
Volume 848, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.physletb.2023.138347

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The travel times of light signals between two antipodal points on a compact star's surface are calculated for two different trajectories. It is shown that, for highly dense stars, the longer trajectory along the surface may have a shorter travel time as measured by asymptotic observers. A critical value of the dimensionless density-area parameter is determined for constant density stars to distinguish cases where crossing through the star's center or following a semi-circular trajectory on the surface has a shorter travel time as measured by asymptotic observers.
The travel times of light signals between two antipodal points on the surface of a compact star are calculated for two different trajectories: a straight line that passes through the center of the star and a semi-circular trajectory that connects the antipodal points along the surface of the star. Interestingly, it is explicitly proved that, for highly dense stars, the longer trajectory (the one that goes along the surface of the star) may be characterized by the shorter travel time as measured by asymptotic observers. In particular, for constant density stars we determine analytically the critical value of the dimensionless density-area parameter Lambda equivalent to 4 pi R(2)p that marks the boundary between situations in which a direct crossing of the star through its center has the shorter travel time and situations in which the semi-circular trajectory along the surface of the star is characterized by the shorter travel time as measured by asymptotic observers [here {R,p} are respectively the radius of the star and its density].

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